Mix these in with 2 beaten eggs per person, mixed in with cheese – here we had about 50g of feta cheese. Season…

Bake for 20-25 minutes at 200 degrees.

That is it. Obviously any variation is fine. Meaties can add bacon; whatever veg is in the fridge will work well. I think some herbs or spices are important but anything goes – a curry style mix would also do well, with cumin, paprika and coriander.

Who made it: Dan and Anna

Recipe: Made up, but based on “the complete vegetarian cookbook” by Sarah Brown, page 180.

January 30, 2011

Kuku is omelette gone coo-coo. It looks like nothing else in the world, but works amazingly well and this may become a staple approach to eggs for us.

Kuku?

The recipe book says that kuku comes in many variations over the middle east, and as far as I can tell it is ordinary omelette but a) it is baked, b) it has a little spice in. The one here, is most definitely not ordinary omelette since it contains the most pure green – which is, in fact, spinach. Again, I strayed a little from the instructions (overspicing as I like to do) so I’ll give brief details.

First, cook the spinach by placing it all into a large saucepan, alone, add a lid and put on a gentle heat. The leaves quickly shrivel up, and with a little stirring the whole thing reduces about 10 fold. Drain the spinach in a sieve or colander and squeeze out the extra water, then chop it up roughly.

Break the eggs and mix them up, trying not to beat them. Add the spinach, chopped mint, crumbled feta cheese, cumin, salt and pepper to taste, then pour everything into a greased oven dish. Bake at 180 degrees celcius for 25-30 minutes until just set.

The recipe book, no doubt following tradition, recommends serving this cold. We did try that the following day and it wasn’t at all bad, but personally I prefer it hot. The spinach forms an interesting base for the eggs, gently flavouring due to the long cooking time. The feta cheese gives it a tang missing from simple omelette, and the mint and cumin make for a very flavoursome and different dish – no doubt you can make up the herbs and spices as takes your fancy.

April 3, 2010

This is basically baked omelette, which tastes very similar to the real thing and is much easier, at the price of slightly longer cooking time.

Omelette, but baked.

So for this we fry some onion, leeks and garlic, then add some fennel. Add some dill when the vegetables have browned off then remove from the heat. Then eggs and goats cheese are mixed in and the whole lot is baked in the oven for 30 minutes.

The taste is very pleasant, not complex but good and hearty, and the goat’s cheese gives it a pleasant tang. Dill works quite well by giving an earthy gentle taste, although the smell will not please everyone! I’d recommend it and will be trying it again.

However, the key thing about the recipe is that you can basically do anything that works as an omelette hear, with the advantage that it cooks reliably in the oven instead of falling apart in a frying pan. So when cooking for a lot of people this approach would be much better than the traditional one.